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January 4, 2009 at 1:22 PM #14750January 4, 2009 at 3:32 PM #323709patientrenterParticipant
patientlywaiting, the Irish property bubble was beyond belief. In the article, the authors point out that an ordinary single family residence in an ordinary area of Dublin cost could as much as a home in Beverly Hills. And the weather s**ks. I can vouch for both.
My brother sold his nice, but ordinary, 175-year-old house in Dublin for $2 million many years before the peak. My niece, visiting in 2001, thought that the SFRs in Crystal Cove (Orange County) were unbelievably cheap. She was just out of college and not planning to leave Ireland, but was tempted to buy one because it looked so cheap compared to houses in Dublin.
It is this extreme disconnect between price and value in Ireland (and the UK) that made me think that the situation here in So Cal could not only continue, but get worse, before it got better. I am still not quite sure why the bubble here popped when it did. China and others lending us the money are still anxious for a continuation of the old days, and God knows the homeowners and pols and bankers are too.
50% off a ridiculous peak is still very high (for what you get). My Irish and English relatives are salivating at the prices they see here. It’s all I can do to get them to wait a while longer before picking up a few investment properties.
January 4, 2009 at 3:32 PM #324208patientrenterParticipantpatientlywaiting, the Irish property bubble was beyond belief. In the article, the authors point out that an ordinary single family residence in an ordinary area of Dublin cost could as much as a home in Beverly Hills. And the weather s**ks. I can vouch for both.
My brother sold his nice, but ordinary, 175-year-old house in Dublin for $2 million many years before the peak. My niece, visiting in 2001, thought that the SFRs in Crystal Cove (Orange County) were unbelievably cheap. She was just out of college and not planning to leave Ireland, but was tempted to buy one because it looked so cheap compared to houses in Dublin.
It is this extreme disconnect between price and value in Ireland (and the UK) that made me think that the situation here in So Cal could not only continue, but get worse, before it got better. I am still not quite sure why the bubble here popped when it did. China and others lending us the money are still anxious for a continuation of the old days, and God knows the homeowners and pols and bankers are too.
50% off a ridiculous peak is still very high (for what you get). My Irish and English relatives are salivating at the prices they see here. It’s all I can do to get them to wait a while longer before picking up a few investment properties.
January 4, 2009 at 3:32 PM #324127patientrenterParticipantpatientlywaiting, the Irish property bubble was beyond belief. In the article, the authors point out that an ordinary single family residence in an ordinary area of Dublin cost could as much as a home in Beverly Hills. And the weather s**ks. I can vouch for both.
My brother sold his nice, but ordinary, 175-year-old house in Dublin for $2 million many years before the peak. My niece, visiting in 2001, thought that the SFRs in Crystal Cove (Orange County) were unbelievably cheap. She was just out of college and not planning to leave Ireland, but was tempted to buy one because it looked so cheap compared to houses in Dublin.
It is this extreme disconnect between price and value in Ireland (and the UK) that made me think that the situation here in So Cal could not only continue, but get worse, before it got better. I am still not quite sure why the bubble here popped when it did. China and others lending us the money are still anxious for a continuation of the old days, and God knows the homeowners and pols and bankers are too.
50% off a ridiculous peak is still very high (for what you get). My Irish and English relatives are salivating at the prices they see here. It’s all I can do to get them to wait a while longer before picking up a few investment properties.
January 4, 2009 at 3:32 PM #324111patientrenterParticipantpatientlywaiting, the Irish property bubble was beyond belief. In the article, the authors point out that an ordinary single family residence in an ordinary area of Dublin cost could as much as a home in Beverly Hills. And the weather s**ks. I can vouch for both.
My brother sold his nice, but ordinary, 175-year-old house in Dublin for $2 million many years before the peak. My niece, visiting in 2001, thought that the SFRs in Crystal Cove (Orange County) were unbelievably cheap. She was just out of college and not planning to leave Ireland, but was tempted to buy one because it looked so cheap compared to houses in Dublin.
It is this extreme disconnect between price and value in Ireland (and the UK) that made me think that the situation here in So Cal could not only continue, but get worse, before it got better. I am still not quite sure why the bubble here popped when it did. China and others lending us the money are still anxious for a continuation of the old days, and God knows the homeowners and pols and bankers are too.
50% off a ridiculous peak is still very high (for what you get). My Irish and English relatives are salivating at the prices they see here. It’s all I can do to get them to wait a while longer before picking up a few investment properties.
January 4, 2009 at 3:32 PM #324045patientrenterParticipantpatientlywaiting, the Irish property bubble was beyond belief. In the article, the authors point out that an ordinary single family residence in an ordinary area of Dublin cost could as much as a home in Beverly Hills. And the weather s**ks. I can vouch for both.
My brother sold his nice, but ordinary, 175-year-old house in Dublin for $2 million many years before the peak. My niece, visiting in 2001, thought that the SFRs in Crystal Cove (Orange County) were unbelievably cheap. She was just out of college and not planning to leave Ireland, but was tempted to buy one because it looked so cheap compared to houses in Dublin.
It is this extreme disconnect between price and value in Ireland (and the UK) that made me think that the situation here in So Cal could not only continue, but get worse, before it got better. I am still not quite sure why the bubble here popped when it did. China and others lending us the money are still anxious for a continuation of the old days, and God knows the homeowners and pols and bankers are too.
50% off a ridiculous peak is still very high (for what you get). My Irish and English relatives are salivating at the prices they see here. It’s all I can do to get them to wait a while longer before picking up a few investment properties.
January 4, 2009 at 9:46 PM #324174capemanParticipantNo doubt! I couldn’t believe the rent they were charging in Dublin when I was living there and bartending back in ’99. Great place but the cost of living was never meant to be high there like in London.
January 4, 2009 at 9:46 PM #324336capemanParticipantNo doubt! I couldn’t believe the rent they were charging in Dublin when I was living there and bartending back in ’99. Great place but the cost of living was never meant to be high there like in London.
January 4, 2009 at 9:46 PM #324257capemanParticipantNo doubt! I couldn’t believe the rent they were charging in Dublin when I was living there and bartending back in ’99. Great place but the cost of living was never meant to be high there like in London.
January 4, 2009 at 9:46 PM #324241capemanParticipantNo doubt! I couldn’t believe the rent they were charging in Dublin when I was living there and bartending back in ’99. Great place but the cost of living was never meant to be high there like in London.
January 4, 2009 at 9:46 PM #323838capemanParticipantNo doubt! I couldn’t believe the rent they were charging in Dublin when I was living there and bartending back in ’99. Great place but the cost of living was never meant to be high there like in London.
January 4, 2009 at 9:53 PM #324189sdrealtorParticipantCheck out this quote:
“I grew up with nothing and I know the value of money,” he adds. “The Celtic Tiger may be dead and if the banking crisis continues I could be considered insolvent. But the one thing that I have is my wife and children — that they can’t take away from me.”
Then check out the picture of his wife in the article. When the money goes, she’ll be gone too.
January 4, 2009 at 9:53 PM #324256sdrealtorParticipantCheck out this quote:
“I grew up with nothing and I know the value of money,” he adds. “The Celtic Tiger may be dead and if the banking crisis continues I could be considered insolvent. But the one thing that I have is my wife and children — that they can’t take away from me.”
Then check out the picture of his wife in the article. When the money goes, she’ll be gone too.
January 4, 2009 at 9:53 PM #324272sdrealtorParticipantCheck out this quote:
“I grew up with nothing and I know the value of money,” he adds. “The Celtic Tiger may be dead and if the banking crisis continues I could be considered insolvent. But the one thing that I have is my wife and children — that they can’t take away from me.”
Then check out the picture of his wife in the article. When the money goes, she’ll be gone too.
January 4, 2009 at 9:53 PM #323853sdrealtorParticipantCheck out this quote:
“I grew up with nothing and I know the value of money,” he adds. “The Celtic Tiger may be dead and if the banking crisis continues I could be considered insolvent. But the one thing that I have is my wife and children — that they can’t take away from me.”
Then check out the picture of his wife in the article. When the money goes, she’ll be gone too.
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